Looking for love
in all the right places
Campy Game
Shows and 8-minute Dating Gives Singles
Options
The scene at Dyke
Night | |
Singer Johnny Lee
warned about looking for love in wrong places.
Heeding his advice, two self-appointed Cupids
planned surefire dating games in two reliable
places for those looking to locate their next
mate.
Taking a page from Game Show King
Chuck Barris, Kristen Porter hosts the third
annual "Valentine's Campy Game Show Night" at
Dyke Night on Thursday, February 13. Games
include Singles Dyke Dating, Couples
Not-Yet-Legal-Wed, and Who Wants to Marry a Blue
Collar Butch.
"So many people complain
that even in a club atmosphere that it's very
hard to meet people and it's hard to know who's
single," said Porter, founder of Dyke Night.
"This came out of a way to identify people as
single and find out what they're looking for and
give people an opportunity to hook up and go out
on a date that we send them on. It's that
easy."
How it works is that host Porter,
joined by Prize Boi Chris, corral contestants
before the show to find out what qualities
they're looking for in a mate. Singles are
slotted into the Dating Game or Who Wants to
Marry a Butch. After consulting with the
bachelor, Porter writes campy multiple-choice
questions to facilitate the Q&A. Just like
the 80s Dating Game, contestants are blinded by
screens and rely on the audience for advice. At
the end, the audience hollers their choice but
the bachelor isn't bound to the
picks.
"It's usually a lot of fun and
usually pretty comical," said Porter. "But you
never know when you're doing these live,
unprepared events what's going to come up so it
keeps me on my toes."
For the game shy,
Porter posts a message board so that people can
tack notes aimed at other singles. In all, the
games shell out $1000 in prize money that's
divvied among individual date packages valued at
$200. The packages include dinner for two at
James' Gate, Zon's, or Dogwood Cafe, along with
local theatre, club or concert tickets. Plus,
for being good sports, contestants receive a
goodie bag from Grand Opening! "Can't really
have a date without that, can you?" asked
Porter. Consolation prizes include CDs, show and
club tickets.
As Porter noted, even in a
laidback atmosphere like the Mid Way, it's still
challenging and stressful to overcome the
looming rejection factor and approach someone.
Recognizing these persistent fears, Porter hopes
to give her community a helping
hand.
"This night grew out of trying to
find a way to help facilitate that process, "
she said. "Besides I'm a bit of a Yenta by
nature and I tend to try to introduce people who
are single or new and this is just a larger
scale way for me to do that."
Dyke Night
at the Midway Cafe, 3496 Washington St., Jamaica
Plain. Doors 8.30, show 9pm. 11pm-2am dancing
with DJ Mix Mistress 21+, $8. www.
dykenight.com
Love in
8-minutes?
A newbie to the
matchmaking scene, Peabody-based David Victory
brings the nation's current singles phenomenon
called 8-minute Dating to Club Cafe on Monday,
February 17.
"It beats the hell out of
clubs, personal ads, or any thing else," said
Victory, an 8-minute Dating independent
contractor. "It's a face-to-face meeting with
someone. You get body language, voice
intonations, and all the stuff you can't get
online and all the stuff that you're not
necessarily going to get at clubs."
An
efficient and successful spin on speed dating,
8-minute Dating was called "part musical bar
stools, part blind-dating" by USA Today. Since
its Boston inception in 1991, the concept has
swept across the country, among straights and
gays. Recent episodes in Sex and the City and
Providence have spotlighted the collective
excitement for the game.
How it works is
that registered participants (you sign-up at
www. 8miunutedating. com) meet at Club Cafe and
are warmly greeted by Victory who puts the
nervous at ease. From there, people proceed to
have a series of eight, 8-minute dates that are
randomly arranged. At a table, people sit across
from another participant and strike up a
conversation. To promote anonymity, a "name
number," i.e. David875, identifies people. At
the end of 8 minutes, Victory dings a little
bell and participants check off boxes on their
dating cards indicating if the person is: (a)
good date, (b) friend, or (c) business contact.
Then off they go to their second date, randomly
arranged at another table, as the experiment
repeats.
After the first four dates, an
intermission lets people grab a drink at the
cash bar or enjoy free appetizers supplied by
Club Cafe. (Bonus: Here, you can chat up a cutie
that isn't on your dating card). After the
intermission, participants return for four more
rounds. When the event is over, people take
their dating cards home and go online to log the
"name number" of people they thought were cool.
If people match, they exchange contact
information.
"People are so busy these
days. Who has time to go to a bar and play dumb
games and try to be cool and catch someone's
eye?" asked Victory. "All the pretense is cast
off. Everyone knows that everyone is here for
the same reason."
For February 17,
Victory designed the event for people between
the ages 25 and 45. People can register up until
the day before the event.
The 8-minute
Dating Web site boasts a whopping 62% match
success rate. And, Victory, like a good
salesman, couldn't say enough positive things
about it. Yet if you're still not convinced,
then the game comes with a guarantee. That is,
if you go to an event but fail to meet anyone
interesting, then you can attend the next one
for free.
Despite the good faith pledge
and Victory's boundless enthusiasm, he still
runs into cynics. But to them, he has an
answer.
"People say, you really can't get
to know someone in 8-minutes and that's of
course true," said Victory. "But what I tell
them is that you can get to know if you want to
talk to them for another eight minutes. That's
how relationships start. If you can enjoy them
for eight minutes, then maybe you can enjoy them
for another eight."
8-minute Dating
takes place on Monday, February 17. At Club
Cafe, 209 Columbus Ave, Boston, (617) 536-0966.
7pm. Price: $33.88.
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